The narrative in the Song of Songs

Many believe the Song to be a loose collection of love poetry that lacks unity. That the Song evidences a loose unity has already been recognised (Pope & Elliott). This thesis provides evidence that any recognised unity is much stronger than has been touted and that the Song also contains a narr...

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Main Author: Fernandes, Gavin
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63523/
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author Fernandes, Gavin
author_facet Fernandes, Gavin
author_sort Fernandes, Gavin
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Many believe the Song to be a loose collection of love poetry that lacks unity. That the Song evidences a loose unity has already been recognised (Pope & Elliott). This thesis provides evidence that any recognised unity is much stronger than has been touted and that the Song also contains a narrative. Narratology has demonstrated that certain types of lyric poetry can have narrative like events. In order to show evidence of a story, one has to demonstrate its “backbone” namely the existence of events that have a causative connection between them. If there is a love story especially, one would expect it to conform to a generalised set of scenarios. Not much has been written by way of narrative apart from the perspectives of dramatists who resort to importing fanciful meaning from outside the text. My work seeks to avoid these tendencies and employs techniques from narratology to examine the structure of the Song, the causality of events in the text, and its spatio-temporal dimension in order to establish a narrative in the Song. It also seeks to address other important issues like how lyric poetry might accommodate narrative; cohesion of what appears to be very disparate elements of the Song; and the meaning of some elusive metaphors and how these might contribute to a narrative. Comments from the examination include the following: “A very well written and highly convincing thesis that the Song can be understood as a lyrical narrative … ” “Demonstrated that an acknowledged, unsolved puzzle exists in scholarship about the structure of the Song, and posited an original solution … ” “There is some good originality in this thesis.” “Very convincing and well-argued. It should definitely be published in the scholarly arena.”
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spelling nottingham-635232025-02-28T15:05:27Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63523/ The narrative in the Song of Songs Fernandes, Gavin Many believe the Song to be a loose collection of love poetry that lacks unity. That the Song evidences a loose unity has already been recognised (Pope & Elliott). This thesis provides evidence that any recognised unity is much stronger than has been touted and that the Song also contains a narrative. Narratology has demonstrated that certain types of lyric poetry can have narrative like events. In order to show evidence of a story, one has to demonstrate its “backbone” namely the existence of events that have a causative connection between them. If there is a love story especially, one would expect it to conform to a generalised set of scenarios. Not much has been written by way of narrative apart from the perspectives of dramatists who resort to importing fanciful meaning from outside the text. My work seeks to avoid these tendencies and employs techniques from narratology to examine the structure of the Song, the causality of events in the text, and its spatio-temporal dimension in order to establish a narrative in the Song. It also seeks to address other important issues like how lyric poetry might accommodate narrative; cohesion of what appears to be very disparate elements of the Song; and the meaning of some elusive metaphors and how these might contribute to a narrative. Comments from the examination include the following: “A very well written and highly convincing thesis that the Song can be understood as a lyrical narrative … ” “Demonstrated that an acknowledged, unsolved puzzle exists in scholarship about the structure of the Song, and posited an original solution … ” “There is some good originality in this thesis.” “Very convincing and well-argued. It should definitely be published in the scholarly arena.” 2020-12-11 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63523/2/FERNANDES_Gavin_PhD_Theology_2020.pdf Fernandes, Gavin (2020) The narrative in the Song of Songs. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Song of Songs; Song of Solomon; Canticles Cancticle; Canticle of Canticles; Song; Love poetry; Ancient near Eastern love poetry; Hebrew love poetry; Hebrew poetry; Writings; Hebrew writings; Post-exilic writings; Post-exilic poetry; Divine abandonment; Presence of God; Love lyrics; Ketuvim; Megillot; Megilloth; Megillah; Solomon; Solomon’s Song; Story; Narrative; narratology; Drama; Lyric; Poetry; Poetic structure; structure; Hebrew; Bible; Old Testament; Bildungsgedicht; Lehrgedicht; Bildungsroman; Analepsis; Ancient Near East; ANE; Anagnorisis; Shepherd; King; Royal psalm; Psalm 45; Hebrew Scriptures
spellingShingle Song of Songs; Song of Solomon; Canticles
Cancticle; Canticle of Canticles; Song; Love poetry; Ancient near Eastern love poetry; Hebrew love poetry; Hebrew poetry; Writings; Hebrew writings; Post-exilic writings; Post-exilic poetry; Divine abandonment; Presence of God; Love lyrics; Ketuvim; Megillot; Megilloth; Megillah; Solomon; Solomon’s Song; Story; Narrative; narratology; Drama; Lyric; Poetry; Poetic structure; structure; Hebrew; Bible; Old Testament; Bildungsgedicht; Lehrgedicht; Bildungsroman; Analepsis; Ancient Near East; ANE; Anagnorisis; Shepherd; King; Royal psalm; Psalm 45; Hebrew Scriptures
Fernandes, Gavin
The narrative in the Song of Songs
title The narrative in the Song of Songs
title_full The narrative in the Song of Songs
title_fullStr The narrative in the Song of Songs
title_full_unstemmed The narrative in the Song of Songs
title_short The narrative in the Song of Songs
title_sort narrative in the song of songs
topic Song of Songs; Song of Solomon; Canticles
Cancticle; Canticle of Canticles; Song; Love poetry; Ancient near Eastern love poetry; Hebrew love poetry; Hebrew poetry; Writings; Hebrew writings; Post-exilic writings; Post-exilic poetry; Divine abandonment; Presence of God; Love lyrics; Ketuvim; Megillot; Megilloth; Megillah; Solomon; Solomon’s Song; Story; Narrative; narratology; Drama; Lyric; Poetry; Poetic structure; structure; Hebrew; Bible; Old Testament; Bildungsgedicht; Lehrgedicht; Bildungsroman; Analepsis; Ancient Near East; ANE; Anagnorisis; Shepherd; King; Royal psalm; Psalm 45; Hebrew Scriptures
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63523/